Luigi Galvani (September 9, 1737–December 4, 1798) was an Italian physician and physicist who lived
and died in Bologna.

Dissecting a frog at a table where he had been conducting experiments with static electricity, Galvani touched
an exposed sciatic nerve of the frog with his metal scalpel, which had picked up a charge. At that moment, he saw
the dead frog's leg kick as if in life. The observation made Galvani the first investigator to appreciate the relationship
between electricity and animation--or life. He is typically credited with the discovery of biological electricity.

Galvani coined the term animal electricity to describe whatever it was that activated the muscles of his specimens.
Along with contemporaries, he regarded their activation as being generated by an electrical fluid that is carried
to the muscles by the nerves. The phenomenon was dubbed "galvanism," after Galvani, on the suggestion
of his peer and sometime intellectual adversary Alessandro Volta.

Galvani's investigations led shortly to the invention of an early battery, but not by Galvani, who did not perceive
electricity as separable from biology. Galvani didn't see electricity as the essence or the stuff itself of life,
which he regarded vitalistically. Thus it was Volta who built the first battery, which became known therefore as
a voltaic pile. While, as Galvani believed, all life is indeed electrical in that all living things are made of
cells and every cell has a cell potential--biological electricity has the same chemical underpinnings as the flow
of current between electrochemical cells, and thus can be recapitulated in a way outside the body. Volta's intuition
was correct as well.